No longer content to serve his master, Wallace is now insisting on a little respect — and his own throne.

Check out the mad king’s Game of Thrones-style Iron Throne, made from carrots and cardboard, in the video below.

“It is beginning to feel like spring, but winter is coming. Wallace’s internet fame has completely gone to his head and now he demands a throne. Will his rule be just, or will his hunger for power be his downfall?” his owner wrote on YouTube.

"I took my glasses off, I’m looking at it, I was pretty shocked to say the least," Amorese told reporters at a press conference. “I had surgery so I didn’t jump up and down, but in my mind I was jumping up and down.”

Amorese immediately sent his father a photo of the winning ticket.

“Do I usually include a ticket? Yeah,” Amorese’s father toldABC News, refusing to say if his son will share the jackpot with him. “I’m retired and I have time on my hands. You know, you want them to get something but if they get $100, they’ll be happy. Most of us don’t usually think you’re going to hit

Seth Robertson and Viet Tran have high hopes for their creative invention

What began as an idea for a senior research project is now a fully-functional device that really has the Internet talking.

Engineering students Seth Robertson, 23, and Viet Tran, 28, from George Mason University in Virginia invested about $600 of their own money into developing a “somewhat portable” device that can put out fires with low-frequency sound waves.

Tran explained to the Washington Post that sound waves are “pressure waves, and they displace some of the oxygen” and at the right frequency, those waves can separate the fire’s oxygen from the fuel.

“The pressure wave is going back and forth, and that agitates where the air is. That specific space is enough to keep the fire from reigniting.”

Initially, the duo assumed high-frequency sound waves would prove effective in dousing a fire. Instead, low frequencies did the trick.

Weighing in at 5 kg, this 38-cm tall chocolate Easter bunny is made by a master chocolatier using 75% Tanzanian cocoa, gold-leaf accents, and sporting two 1.07-carat solitaire diamonds, valued at more than $37,320, for eyes.

This is one seasonal treat that is not for those watching the budget, or the waistline. The bunny will add a whopping 548,000 calories to your spring diet.

Or you can let it sit around for a while.

The one-of-a-kind bunny was commission by VeryFirstTo.com, an online British luxury retailer that occasionally makes headlines for its over-the-top luxury items and experiences. (The site offered a Christmas hamper worth $134,650 last year.)

Film editor and animation director Paul Hollingsworth and his daughter Hailee are huge LEGO fans and have become an impressive movie-making duo.

They’ve even been featured in a book about their joint passion: Brick Flicks.

In their latest video, which took three months to create, they teamed up with a handful of master builders, animators and artists to bring Spielberg’s epic dinosaur film to life, LEGO-style.

“Jurassic Park is one of the best movies of all time. That’s why I wanted to re-create it in Lego,” explained Paul Hollingsworth, whose creative collective, Digital Wizards, has produced a series of LEGO shorts.

The mysterious Toronto tunnel proved to be nothing more than a local resident's man cave.

Now that the Toronto-tunnel mystery has been solved, it’s time for a new underground head-scratcher.

And if you can solve it, dinner for four (with wine) is on the house.

“There is a tunnel below my restaurant and no one can tell me what purpose it served,” said Mike Bhatnagar, owner of the Hat Resto Pub at 10251 Jasper Avenue, Edmonton.

“The tunnel once ran under Jasper Avenue but has been blocked off. I have wondered if it might date back to Prohibition days,” he told the Edmonton Journal.

“It is still 11.5 metres in length and about one-metre wide. It would have been easy to roll a barrel through it. More recently, bricks have been used to define the tunnel and supports have been inserted to make it safe.”

The building was built in 1908 and first opened as a restaurant — then called the Golden Spike — in 1912.

Bhatnagar and his wife bought the Hat in 2013. He believes the tunnel has been around since those early days and was likely blocked off during LRT construction.

These familiar lyrics belong to some of the classic, uplifting tunes comprising this year's World Happiness Day project by the United Nations: Yes, it's the 'world's happiest playlist," and yes, of course Pharrell Williams is one of the collaborators behind it.

The international organization created the annual World Happiness Day in 2012, to rejoice in unity and call for a "more inclusive equitable and balanced approach to economic growth that promotes sustainable development, poverty eradication, happiness and the well-being of all people."

This year, the U.N. initiative invited people to share their favourite happy songs, tweeting them with the hashtag #HappySoundsLike.